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Dr. Jeff Amato Geological Sciences 8/26/08 GEOL 470 Structural Geology OUTLINE Why structure is important An example of structural analysis Earth Structure
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Time Scale
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Why study structural geology?
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How do we explain the major features of the Earth?
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Why are there mountains? Matterhorn, Swiss Alps
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How can solid rock flow like taffy? Morcles Nappe, Swiss Alps
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Where is the oil?
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How do faults relate to earthquakes Active mountain. front, Basin and Range Province, Nevada
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Structural Hazards and Society
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Structural analysis of a pizza…
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It all starts with field mapping Brooks Range Foothills, AK
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A basic tool: the geologic map
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A structural cross section: Determine deep structure from surface data
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Summary: Structures include: Folds, faults, joints Foliations, lineations, shear zones Structures are found at every scale Plate, mountain, outcrop, hand sample, thin section
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Summary: Structural geology is important to society Helps to find resources and determine hazards
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Summary: Structural analysis is conducted through observation and interpretation: Kinematics: What moved? How much? What direction? Dynamics: What forces and stresses were responsible?
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Summary: Geologic maps and cross-sections help visualize the big picture
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Earth Structure
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How many layers in the earth? Two answers to this…
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1) Compositional Classification Each layer has same basic composition.
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Crust
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Mantle
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Crust= low density rock Mantle = high density rock Core= iron
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2) Mechanical Classification Each layer will consist of material that behaves the same way under stress
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Outer Core= liquid Inner Core= solid
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Mechanical Classification LithosphereSolid plates, resistant to flow Plates are moving AsthenosphereSolid: flows under stress Convection! Outer Core Inner Core Liquid Solid
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Oceanic crust vs. Continental crust
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Why are the oceans deep, and the continents at high elevations?
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What is density? ( ) mass (g) == volume (cm 3 )
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Density of different materials Water: 1 g/cm 3 Quartz: 2.3 g/cm 3 Rocks:2-3.5 g/cm 3 Iron: 8 g/cm 3 Lead: 11 g/cm 3 Gold: 19 g/cm 3
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Density of different materials Quartz: 2.3 g/cm 3 Gold: 19 g/cm 3
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= 0.9 g/cm3 = 1.0 g/cm3
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0 (km) Continental crust (2.8 g/cm 3 ) Moho discontinuity Horizontal distance not to scale Mantle (3.4 g/cm 3 ) Oceanic crust (3.0 g/cm 3 ) 10 20 30 40 50 Less dense continental crust floats on denser mantle. Continental crust is less dense than oceanic crust.
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